The Pete Quiñones Show - Episode 1189: Pete on 'It's Too Late' w/ Alan Mosley

Episode Date: March 20, 2025

55 MinutesSome Strong LanguageAlan Mosley of It's Too Late With Alan Mosley asked Pete to come on the show and talk about 'America's greatest ally.'It's Too Late With Alan MosleyPete and Thomas777 'At... the Movies'Support Pete on His WebsitePete's PatreonPete's SubstackPete's SubscribestarPete's GUMROADPete's VenmoPete's Buy Me a CoffeePete on FacebookPete on TwitterBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-pete-quinones-show--6071361/support.

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Starting point is 00:01:08 You catch them in the corner of your eye. Distinctive, by design, they move you, even before you drive. The new Cooper plugin hybrid range. For Mentor, Leon and Terramar, now with flexible PCP finance and trade-in boosters of up to 2000 euro. Search Coopera and discover our latest offers. Cooper Design that moves Finance provided by way of higher purchase agreement
Starting point is 00:01:37 from Volkswagen Financial Services Ireland Limited. Subject to lending criteria. Terms and conditions apply. Volkswagen Financial Services Ireland Limited. Trading as Cooper Financial Services is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Welcome back to the show, everybody.
Starting point is 00:02:01 Our guest this evening is, of course, the host of the Pete Kinones show, which Pete, I've actually got a blast from the past for you. I think you're our third, longest running guest. Check this out. Pete, this is why I asked you if you could do this week, almost seven years to the day from episode 11 of the gold standard. There's Pete and I in simpler, happier times when, uh, yeah, we're probably just talking about Game of Thrones or something like that. Yeah, well, I mean, you know, I mean, in all fairness, you were calling yourself Mance.
Starting point is 00:02:35 And I, at the time, I was a big Game of Thrones fan because I just, you know, I didn't know yet what horrors yet awaited us both in terms of the show and in terms of never, ever, ever, ever, ever reading the end of the books. But you're not going to trigger me into going to that. Pete Canones, welcome back to the show. Doing good, man. Thank you. Thank you for having me back.
Starting point is 00:02:57 Well, I wanted to start off with. I've seen all some of your really cool pictures on the internet. You guys just recently got back from a vacation. Where'd you guys go? We went down to Buckeliville. We went to El Salvador. We were down there for eight days and seven nights and stayed in San Salvador the whole time. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:19 So what was the motivation for El Salvador in particular? Did you just want to kind of get to check it out with your own eyes and everything going on in the news? Or was it just genuinely an interesting vacation destination? A little bit of both. It was mostly, well, we wanted to get out of the country. We had talked about doing an international trip. And we were talking about Europe and Europe is kind of, depending on where you go, it's kind of sad.
Starting point is 00:03:46 I mean, it's like, I mean, literally if I want to do that, I can just go to like New York City and go to the Bronx or something like that. So, you know, I was just like, well, you know, let's, let's stay within, I mean, there's central time just like us. So it's like, yeah, let's fly down there and see what happens and see what it's like. And we had a great time. We stayed in like a boutique hotel. that was still insanely cheap, much cheaper than here.
Starting point is 00:04:15 Wasn't owned by Indians, which was just amazing for somebody who, you know, somebody who drives a lot and spends a lot of time in, you know, the freeway side hotels, it's like, wow, this place was not owned by Indians. Holy crap. Well, I mean, maybe some people could say like Native America, like Native America's Indians. there were some of those around. But it was really nice. And, you know, it's still inexpensive.
Starting point is 00:04:47 And I could just say that it's probably felt safer, you know, at night walking around than most big cities that I've ever been to. There's an armed presence. They have, like, a civil guard people with, like, openly carrying pistol grip shotguns all over the place. I mean, you know, if you walk for, you know, if you walk for a half mile, you'll see a few, and they have regular military carrying M16s. And I don't think it's, I think it's really just a show of, you know, FAAFO right now,
Starting point is 00:05:28 because most of their violent criminals are in jail and they're never getting out. So, you know, imagine that. Well, that's an interesting point. Now, I mean, I know you that guys were there for basically just a little over a week, but you can't help but notice those things when you're out on the street. So let me just, I don't know if either of us really had a plan for tonight. I just figured we would just hang out and talk. But I think that this is an interesting point that I think when a lot of people see kind of what's just,
Starting point is 00:05:58 when you're only getting kind of the drive-by 24-hour news version of what's gone on in El Salvador, you know, people fall into the two camps of, oh, well, Buckel's doing a great job, he's cleaning up the streets, or, oh, Buckel's a tyrant, you know, look at, look at the way he's manhandling people. This is, this is a loss of civil liberties. Did you get the feeling when you were there for that period of time that people were walking around the street in fear of their civil liberties, or did you get the feeling that people were grateful? They were, we stayed right across the street from a mall and like a couple of nights right outside the mall. I mean, there was literally like a party. It was like a street party. And I don't even
Starting point is 00:06:37 know if it was planned. It almost seemed imprompt to. I don't think that they were worried about getting arrested or anything like that. The only kind of, we went to the National Museum and they had some art installations from the past couple of years. And you could tell that like, you know, typical shitlib kind of stuff. So I talked to, there was a guy there, you know, there were a bunch of young people. And when I say young people, I'm talking about early 20s who could answer questions. They spoke English.
Starting point is 00:07:13 And that's where you hear the shit lib kind of thing. You hear the kind of thing that you've heard from shitlubs in this country. Oh, you know, well, there were some people who were arrested, who weren't, you know, who weren't part of gangs and everything. may have just only been friends with somebody in the gang. And that's the kind of pushback you got. And but, you know, you're in an art museum. What would you expect?
Starting point is 00:07:37 What would you expect of somebody working in an art museum? So it seemed like the people on the outside. And I just saw a video the, I think it was yesterday, Buceli was at a rally or something like that. And all these people were excited to see him taking selfies with them. And they were all young. I mean, they were all in their 20s. So, yeah, I don't think they're worried about their civil liberal.
Starting point is 00:07:58 being violated, I think they're enjoying their liberty, but they also understand that, you know, it came, it came at a price. And I think they're very grateful for the, you know, the price that was paid for that. Well, if there's something I feel like I've noticed in, in recent months or years even, it's that, you know, even if you're looking at one specific demographic, like, say young people ages, you know, early 20s, mid-20s, you're even even with that if you've a lot of people I think think oh well young people people are more liberal when they're younger you're going to find a lot of progressives that are that are younger you know when you're thinking of like protests on the street and throwing tomato juice on the paintings and blocking traffic these are all young people and I was like well there there may be truth to that that there's a high percentage of those types of people who are also young but I think it's it's a big split between because there's also a lot of young people people in that age that get married and start families, right? But I think, in my opinion, and you can correct me if you've had a different point of view. But from my perspective, the young 23 to 28-ish-year-olds who are starting careers, getting married and starting families, are not the same young people that you're seeing gluing themselves to statues and
Starting point is 00:09:23 adopting progressivism. What would you say to that? Well, I mean, I would say that I'm mostly in a bubble when it comes to that. Most of the, I guess what we would call the Zumer Generation that I deal with is pretty right-wing, you know, pretty based. Even when I go to like my, my, visit my wife's family, they're like at the, at holidays, there's a lot of kids there who are between like 19 and 25. they're not particularly progressive. They're probably more conservative leaning. But, you know, one thing that they do have is they all have jobs. They're getting married.
Starting point is 00:10:06 They're buying houses. And these aren't people who, they don't come from a rich family, you know. So maybe being in a huge city right now isn't the greatest thing if you're young and people in a smaller town can find more opportunities and, you know, they can network better through people, especially if, you know, as soon as they graduate high school, they don't move away, move half a country away to a really cool zip code so they can be in a cool place. They can do, they can sit around and they can stay in their area, network and build something. And I think maybe we're getting back to that as far as a culture goes.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Maybe we're getting back to a culture of people who are not going to be so excited about graduating high school and maybe graduating college and then moving to the big city or moving to a nice suburb zip code. Well, you know, maybe I'll stay around my family and build here. you know, because I think that, you know, from what I see and from, you know, the people that I know, I don't hear people complaining that there aren't opportunities out there. Well, I kind of wonder if it's, if it can't just be simply the bees. And so maybe that goes a little ways towards explaining that reverse. Maybe I'm supposed to seek knowledge and skills and then go apply them at home rather than go apply them for somewhere. else in some cubicle in some place that's not my home. Would you say that makes sense? Ready for huge savings? Well mark your calendars from November 28 to 30th because the
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Starting point is 00:12:56 Financial Services, Ireland Limited. Subject to lending criteria. Terms and conditions apply. Broke wagon financial services Ireland Limited. Trading as Cooper Financial Services is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. Sure. And I think there's also power in that.
Starting point is 00:13:10 I think the more you get, like cities are just basically multicultural, multiracial. And there's no cohesion there. When you're, when you're, when you stick around where you grew up, if that place is more rural, there'll be a tendency to be a more tight-knit, more homogenous. And I think there's more power in homogeneity, especially even with political power. I think, you know, if you have that, you don't have as many special interest groups vying for special privileges and things like that.
Starting point is 00:13:50 And I think that's one of the, one of the things that I've come recently to be a, You know, when I've been for a while an opponent of multiculturalism and multiracialism in, in areas, in localities. And I think a lot of it has to do with politics is, you know, we see it in this country. You know, Trump gets elected and everybody's like, oh, we voted for him. He's for us. And then it's like, well, I mean, how many different, his first term, let's see, well, he did everything, he did things for Israel. he pandered to the black population. I mean, he didn't pardon Ross Ulbric or
Starting point is 00:14:31 or Edward Snowden or Julian Assange, but he pardoned a bunch of rappers. Yeah. So, you know, I think leadership and political leadership in multicultural and multiracial societies have a tendency to have being pulled in different directions. So, you know, the smaller area you can be in, the less of that a politician has to deal with, it's actually even easier to, it's a govern.
Starting point is 00:15:02 And, you know, it's easier to see as a, you know, as somebody who's part of that homogeneity, it's easier for you, whether it be cultural, whether it be, whatever it is, it's easier for you to not have your interests cut off at the knees by competing interest groups. Well, before we move on completely from your El Salvador trip and talking about Buckel, I think a lot more, Javier Miele in Argentina has gotten a lot more press, I think, at least domestically here than Buckel has. And maybe it's because of the chainsaw stuff and just the attitude and his press and all that. But of those two, which one do you think in the long term is going to be seen as the bigger success for his country? I think Buckelly will because he's, I think the reason why a lot of Americans, and not only libertarian types, but a lot of Americans appeal, they look at Milley and they see more, they just see more liberalism.
Starting point is 00:16:16 They see more classical liberalism. Oh, cutting taxes, oh, this, or that. He hasn't done, if he has done heavy-handed stuff, I remember there were a bunch of commies who were protesting in the street. And I don't know that he like did what Buceli would do or just round them up and throw him in jail. Sure. And so people, Americans can relate to that more because it's like, oh, you need to process and, you know, we have this history. Well, no, it doesn't work. And Malay is, the problem I have with Malay is that what's going to happen when he's out of office?
Starting point is 00:16:57 Are they going to elect another Malay? Because that's not the history of most societies when they have, if they have great economic prosperity. They normally decide, and Sweden was like this at one point where they were just like an open, you know, oh, you know, free markets and, you know, well, why did a free market work in Sweden? Well, I mean, everybody's related. There's no competing, the competing interests are reduced. I think that if Malay is not setting up a successor, you know, they talk about how, oh, Trump needs a successor here or anything, that's going to be J.D. Vance. If Malay's not setting up a successor to come in there and continue what he's doing, then what happens when he
Starting point is 00:17:51 gets out of there? They vote in the same old people that's like, oh, well, we've had enough success. Now we have to take care of people who are poor, and we need to do more for the poor. That seems to be a, especially a Latin America, that seems to be something that happens. I mean, even happens in northern European countries. But Buckelly, I think Buckelly is a smart. enough to know. Ready for huge savings? We'll mark your calendars from November 28 to 30th because the Liddle Newbridge Warehouse sale is back.
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Starting point is 00:19:31 And then, yeah, I was staying right around the corner from the gigantic Google building. And I was like, that's not a, that's not a good sign. Because when you look what, look what happened to Ireland. I mean, Ireland, you know, 25 years ago was a homogenous country of Catholics. Now it's basically being over. I mean, their prime minister is a gay Indian. I mean, what the hell? How does that happen?
Starting point is 00:19:58 Yeah. So I'm hoping that Boote Kelly, if he is trying to make it a tourist destination or if he's trying to make it a place where companies can open up, have headquarters, Central American headquarters or whatever, that he doesn't forget about the culture and he doesn't, you know, and he has somebody set up to come in and replace him that has the same kind of attitude he does because, and I think there is a better chance of that with him considering El Salvador was in a much worse situation than Argentina. I know the libertarian types, because I used to be one, will look and go,
Starting point is 00:20:40 well, no, Argentina was much worse because Argentina, their economy, their economy, economics, economics, economics. I mean, like, literally like 1% of the El Salvadorian population was being murdered every year. Wow. So it's like, I mean, I think that's a bigger problem than, you know, oh, we had, we had inflation. Inflation, bad. That destroys. inflation is what destroys what destroys empires
Starting point is 00:21:13 oh okay well I mean like murder let's not talk about murder yeah so yeah he stopped murder he stopped it from being the murder capital of the world and so good to being in the safest country in the Western Hemisphere and yeah I think people are going to probably want to keep that
Starting point is 00:21:34 that that's going to be something that's going to be a little more important to the next generation, I hope, then we need to keep inflation down because, you know, if line don't go up, line needs to go up. If line will go up, it no good. We don't have no civilization. If line will go up. Well, you mentioned, you mentioned, of course, the big T word, Trump. Let me ask you about that. So, you know, I, I always remember, and again, maybe this is just kind of an impression of, you know, social media or just media in general. But in some of, some the elections around the world, whether it's Buceli or Miele or all that broad in Italy. I always forget that, forget her name.
Starting point is 00:22:18 But in some of these different political movements, people like to say, oh, well, this is inspired by Trump. You know, all of these different peoples around the world are seeing what MAGA has done and seeing the Trump movement in America and all these different political movements around the world inspired by Trump. But not only do I not necessarily. believe that. But I tend to think just in the guys we've talked about so far, when you're comparing El Salvador, Argentina, and the United States, which of course are very different places. So it's
Starting point is 00:22:47 not so much comparing the nations, so much it's just comparing, you know, the leaders of those nations. Is it really that those guys are inspired by Trump? Or is it actually more that Trump has largely failed to be quite as transformational as those guys have been the other way around? I would say the reason why you see people like Buckelly, Miele, Orban in Hungary, you see the rise of the AFD party in Germany. And you see movements like that and Trump is because people are just sick of this post-war consensus bull. And I think it's pretty obvious that you, that it's very important the post-war consensus of, oh, we're just liberals and we get to live.
Starting point is 00:23:43 It's a multicultural land. You know, I remember Barbara Lerner, Specter, an American Jew who went over to Sweden with her Madeira NGO and said, what, 15 years ago, that Europe is not going to survive unless it becomes multicultural. And we're going to be blamed for that. Wow. Okay. That's interesting. I think people are sick of this. I think people, the reason you see all of this is because it's unsustainable.
Starting point is 00:24:17 And when you see someone like Daryl Cooper and being called a Nazi because he went on Tucker and then he went on Joe Rogan and he said things that were in the 1950s, you could argue that Churchill was, you know, know, a bum. And people would say that Churchill was a drunk. Everyone knew that. Churchill was in debt and was basically the slave of whoever would pay off his debts. Everyone would, everyone knew that. And you see the way people are reacting to it. And you see that there are people on both sides fighting that completely agree that the post-war consensus needs to be destroyed. And then you see people who are fighting tooth and nail and they're calling Daryl Cooper a Nazi and a Nazi apologist because he said you know because he says things like you know maybe that war didn't need to be fought maybe the United States didn't need to get involved and you know maybe
Starting point is 00:25:16 maybe Russia was planning to invade um was planning to invade the European continent like Victor Suvorov said in the book Icebreaker late I mean it lays out of it an incredible argument for. I think that's what you're seeing. And I think that it's just what they call the spirit of the age is the spirit of the age we're in is this post-war consensus that, you know, no one can be too right wing. You know, we can have people who are openly communist. I mean, like literally call themselves communist, Marxist-Leninists,
Starting point is 00:25:55 and they can work in the government. but if somebody calls themselves a national socialist, well, they can't even have a bank account. Sure. I mean, that's the post-war consensus. Being to, you know, being too, it's my people. I care about my people. And I care about my people enough that if you try and hurt my people and if you have been hurting my people, I'll start, you know, I will kick you out of this country. I will demonize you and kick you out of this country.
Starting point is 00:26:28 You kick you out of our country. I mean, that's the worst thing possible to care about your own people. I mean, that's the third rail saying that you have, you know, not everyone, Europeans saying that they care about other European people and that they have something in common and they have interests. And I think that that's what you're seeing. I think that's part of what's happening with Trump. I think Trump is much more complicated. The reason for his rise is much more complicated than Malay in, you know, in Argentina, which is a mostly Spanish country and in El Salvador, which is, you know, almost universally El Salvadorian.
Starting point is 00:27:15 Monocultural societies, you know, this country is much different. The problems we have here run a lot deeper than in those places. So, you know, I don't even see Trump as an answer. I see Trump as a sign. You know, I think he can get some things done that will actually help us, help the average person. But I don't see him curing our ills or, you know, any problems that we have. He has way, there are way too many special interests. elite groups and too many groups with money who can pull his strings and, you know, move him in one
Starting point is 00:28:01 direction and the other. So to me, it's always been, and I know it's kind of a trope, but Trump is just really a signal, but he's not the answer. Well, I think, you know, to call out the elephant in the room, those, those a few things I had in my notes that I want to make sure we touch on for we get too far out of time. I know that as we speak, they're allegedly getting ready to do this massive dump of JFK files, which I don't know how anyone can be excited for that when you see the way the whole Epstein thing went down,
Starting point is 00:28:35 when you see all those grifters walking out of the White House with their binders filled with nothing, like with absolutely no information whatsoever. And, of course, you know, also the same week, you know, you and I had spoke briefly earlier in the week that, you know, we'll be lucky if we're, we get to do this show and we're not at war with Iran by the time you and I sit down to talk because we're bombing Yemen because supposedly we're protecting shipping from all these horrible
Starting point is 00:28:59 pirates. And then of course, you know, just this past week with the CR, there was the whole big showdown between Trump and Massey, Thomas Massey from Kentucky. And, you know, to call out the elephant of the room, there's a little bit of a link between all of those individual things and hearkening back to, well, what's one major difference between kind of Trump and America versus a lot of these other examples you've given? It's that it's a link to this, to this funny little nation over in the Middle East. I know you know where I'm going with that. I think at the end of the day, we all knew going in,
Starting point is 00:29:38 you had already mentioned a short list of things that Trump had promised in the first, that didn't work out in the Trump 1.0 that people then had hopes that Trump 2.0 would be better. And there have been some good things in Trump 2.0. You know, you mentioned Ross wasn't pardoned in the first one. He was pardoned in this one, just as one example. But we all knew going in that if things could get better domestically, then great. But the huge red flag would always be the Adelson's and Trump's connections with Israel. And now here we are, what, eight weeks into the new administration.
Starting point is 00:30:15 We're now starting to see that red flag takes interstate. Well, I mean, we knew it was there. Yeah. And also the J6 prisoners being pardoned. I think that's huge. Yes. Because, I mean, as as Daryl Cooper has said, he said, it wasn't an insurrection, but he wishes it would have been. Sure.
Starting point is 00:30:41 You know, and that they would have done something because, you know, this country proved just how lost it is. and maybe lost forever because Jeffrey Epstein was killed in a jail cell and there wasn't a revolution because of it. Yeah. You know, that that should have been the last draw. And, you know, oh, are we going to see Epstein file? Are we going to see the JFK files? I don't think we're going to see them all. No.
Starting point is 00:31:13 I think we're going to see. I mean, maybe the only thing that makes me think maybe they do is we will is because, because Glenn Beck is playing damage control already. It's not about the who did it. It's about the why and what happened. So, you know, and anybody who knows anything about Glenn Beck and some of the absolutely insane things he said after October 7th, 2020, 3, maybe he knows something. Maybe he doesn't.
Starting point is 00:31:42 Who knows? But, I mean, I just don't know what to expect from this because, you know, our greatest ally is implicated with Epstein. Our greatest ally is going to be implicated with, is going to be mentioned in the JFK files. I've heard from people who've seen them, that they know this, that this is, I know people who know who the shooter was. Like, they know the names of the people who pulled the trigger. These things are not secret. They have been leaked before, but it were cleaned up very quickly. I mean, this all points to Israel.
Starting point is 00:32:20 And I don't even know that it matters. I think we're at such a point where, like, boomers and a lot of unfortunate early gen Xers, or it could come out that Israel was responsible for killing the president of the United States or at least help plan it. And that they were blackmailing Americans into committing treason by orchestrating them, having sex with children. And I think a lot of people won't even care. I mean, I, so sure, we see the, I mean, I can run down a whole list I have in my head of
Starting point is 00:33:03 people who belong in jail right now. You know, the clearest, clear some of them, Adam Kinzinger and a bunch of these people. They should be in Gitmo. I mean, really, they should be getting the Rosenberg. But I just don't see this happening. I don't see, you know, and I'm not one of these people who, the whole Merriam Adelson giving $100 million and everything like that, that's not even necessary. Yeah, I remember talking to Jeremy R. Hammond, and he wrote a book called Obstacle to Peace about
Starting point is 00:33:40 about Israel, Palestine. And he said, you don't even need APEC. Christian evangelicals in this country are so brainwashed into thinking, oh, our greatest ally and boomers and our greatest ally is like, why would the Houthis attack our shipping? Oh, I don't know. Maybe there was this proxy war where the United States completely armed and gave
Starting point is 00:34:06 bombers and jets and fighter planes to Saudi Arabia, taught him how to target and went in and like destroyed Yemen to the point where like cholera, something they hadn't seen in 50 to 60 years came back. And they were targeting, you know, infrastructure, like hospitals and water treatment plants. I mean, maybe we've forgotten about that. They haven't. I haven't. You know, if the first thing Trump should have done, one of the first things he should have done was he should have sent a delegation to
Starting point is 00:34:42 in Yemen and said, look, things have been, you know, sorry we did all this. What do we need to do? How do we make it so that we can have commerce through these straits again? What do you need? I mean, payback. It's like, oh, they're attack. Why would they attack? It's like, first of all, as far as I understand, they've never attacked a commercial,
Starting point is 00:35:06 an American commercial ship. Now, I know a lot of ships have different ports of course. call and everything or you know they're registered in other countries because of the Jones Act and everything that's neither here nor there but the why would they attack the American military ships oh I don't know I mean maybe this thing called you know the Saudis just destroying them in the United States telling them how to do it I mean I the people who instinctively jump to our greatest ally.
Starting point is 00:35:50 They don't realize that I mean literally we're since World War II we've been controlled and even before World War II. Basically look at Biden's cabinet. It was 60 to 80% of it had oh I don't know
Starting point is 00:36:08 names that sound like names that you might find in Israel? Sure. Yeah. The secretary of the secretary of state after October 7th went to Jerusalem, went into the Knesset and said, I'm here as a Jew. Not I'm here as the American Secretary of State. I'm here as a Jew. Um, yeah, I mean, everybody, let's get into conspiracy. Let's get into conspiracy theory land. We've been an occupied government by a foreign power for a very long time. And all Israel is, is a land-based aircraft carrier in the Middle East. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:50 That's it. That's all it is. And what does that bring us? Attacks. Hatred. Because why? What is our, what would an American, if you believe in the founding of this country, if you're a constant, all we need to do is go back to the Constitution.
Starting point is 00:37:12 All we need to do is go back. back to the Articles of Confederation. Well, yeah, what did those people say? No binding alliances? Sure. And people say, oh, you know, talking about this is so low IQ. Really? So Henry Ford, Charles Lindberg, Martin Luther, Thomas Aquinas,
Starting point is 00:37:41 people throughout the 20th century, These were low IQ people. Oh, and we're not supposed to look to them and see what they wrote. Or how about I just study their own history and read their own books? Jewish virtual encyclopedia is online. One of my favorite resources. I have access to the older ones too. I'm reading on my, I'm up to episode 19 with a Russian scholar of reading 200 years together by Alexander Solzheneson, which is the history of the history of the history of the,
Starting point is 00:38:13 the Jews in Russia from 1795 to 1995. I'm studying. I'm looking at the history. And I'm seeing this happens over and over and over again. You can't let this little country control us. And then there are, then there are these people who are like, well, actually, we control them. Okay. Run with that.
Starting point is 00:38:40 We've been under occupation for, 80 years. So we control them. Great. Same thing. It's reciprocal. And then you have the city of London. It's this big triangle. It's all the same thing. It's all controlled by the same people. So what do we do? Putin doesn't have this problem. They're in Russia. They don't have, they don't have control there. Well, why? Because he doesn't fucking let him. Yeah. When he when he was elected in the 90s, there were these oligarchs in the country who were divvying up the country
Starting point is 00:39:19 to the point where the average lifespan of a Russian male had been reduced 20 years. And he chased them out. And he drove them out. And the ones he didn't drive out, he put under his heel and made him work for them. Well, where did they escape to?
Starting point is 00:39:38 New York City, London, Tel Aviv. okay Kiev okay there's the elephant you want to talk about the elephant in the room there's the elephant in the room
Starting point is 00:39:52 I just laid it out for you now go ahead and call me low IQ because you don't want to have a conversation with me because I know this I'm going to give you dates and I'm going to give you names
Starting point is 00:40:03 and I'm going to give you treaties and I'm going to give you the history that you don't know because you're just like I have to And I have to judge everybody as an individual because no groups ever come together and organize in their own self-interest, right? Libertarians? That's, this has given me too many follow-up questions in one, in one spiel.
Starting point is 00:40:33 So I'm going to try to remember a few of them. So I was reminded, as you were saying, because you had mentioned, you know, kind of, you. that people, that if there were these revelations, if some things did come out, that you, you feel like people just wouldn't care. Because look at the things that people know now. Like we've all seen the graphics of, you know, here's three quarters of some of the most powerful and influential American politicians and all the ones that have dual, you know, dual citizenship with Israel, which is, you know, I think one is one too many, but that's, it's a lot. And then you think of just some of the other just run-of-the-mill grift, right? Like you think of, you know, when the Nancy Pelosi's and Elizabeth Warrens of the world go into politics, making, you know, $100,000 a year. And then after 20 years, they have a couple hundred million dollars.
Starting point is 00:41:26 Everyone knows that, right? Like, we all know that they're robbing people blind and doing insider training and accepting bribes and all that. And, of course, there's, you know, one that I always love to mention, you know, there's, you know, the, Congress literally has a fund to set aside just to settle all the sexual impropriety cases with, you know, with, with congressmen and senators. So these people just, just, just rape and abuse with impunity and the government just pays their tab, you know. Again, so I, you know, and I'm just simply listing things like these are the state, bro. Yeah, just did the state. Bro.
Starting point is 00:42:01 And that's not going to happen anymore. Just end the state, bro. So all of these things are things that people know, like this is. all, you know, common. You can Google any of those things and see that it's true in 15 seconds. But yet all those people get reelected, though, right? So the public at large knows these things, and yet incumbents win, like, what, 92% of their races or some ridiculous number like that? So you know that they do those things, and yet you reelect them. But you also mentioned, I know you brought up Russia and Putin in that he doesn't have some of these same specific issues
Starting point is 00:42:34 that a Trump has or even maybe a melee has. But you also mentioned that, well, I, you know, who's Trump's successor going to be? Is it going to be J.D. Vance? Is that going to be MAGA 2.0 or is that going to be something different? And that's a, I don't know if we even have time to go into that. You're wondering if is Bukkele going to have a successor? Does Putin have a successor? Is there someone coming? If Putin had a heart attack and died today, who's taken over Russia? I think there's a better chance of Putin having a successor who will, will continue his legacy of, you know, basically telling the West to go screw themselves,
Starting point is 00:43:13 because that's just basically their culture. You know, their culture is we're Russians. We want to, I think Russians know their history. You know, like I said, I'm reading this book 200 years together that Alexander Salshanesan wrote. It's the book that Jordan Peterson won't talk about. And there's a reason why it hasn't been officially translated into English yet. I think they know their history.
Starting point is 00:43:38 I think they know that if they allow people who are not Russian to take over or come in and have influence, they lose who they are as Russians. And they're already succumbing to that. I mean, it's hard to keep the West out. But I think Putin has, there's a better chance of that happening with Putin. I mean, look at Putin. Putin has, I'm sure you probably see in interviews with Sergei Lavarov, his. a foreign minister. He's probably the greatest statesman
Starting point is 00:44:10 in the world. I mean, no, hands down. He knows how to negotiate has only Russia's interest when he talks. And he is somebody who, when he
Starting point is 00:44:30 comes into a room, he commands it. And you know that he's a serious person. See, this is the reason why I think a lot of people don't like Putin and don't like Lavrov and didn't even like Medvedev. These are serious people. We, they're, yes, have they had people killed probably most likely.
Starting point is 00:44:57 So of we. So of our leaders. Our leaders have killed millions. just for interests, for commerce, for minerals, for ethnic animosities that go back centuries by certain groups that have taken over, taken over influence in this government. But I think that they genuinely are serious people.
Starting point is 00:45:28 I mean, who takes, I mean, Crenshaw, He's literally a comic book villain. He has a friggin' eye patch. Yeah. How do you take that seriously? How do you take Nancy Pelosi seriously? I mean, she's a dottering old fool and drunk half the time. How do you take any of these people?
Starting point is 00:45:51 Our president literally used to run a reality show. The president of Ukraine was on TV as the president. of Ukraine. Like he literally became the character that he was on TV with the same friggin path. And then you look and you're like, how did Putin you know, well, Putin was former KGB,
Starting point is 00:46:18 St. Petersburg unit, probably East Berlin as well. You look at Lavrov, you look at, these are people who, they're serious people who care, who I don't think they can be bought off by foreign powers.
Starting point is 00:46:38 I think they would probably catch a bullet if they were bought off by foreign powers. So, I mean, is Putin going to have, this goes back to, is Putin going to have a successor? Probably, I don't know who that is yet. I haven't looked into it enough. I actually know some Russian experts that probably could have a good opinion on that. But ever since this whole thing started in, you know, February of 2022. And, you know, I mean, the history of Ukraine started in February 2020.
Starting point is 00:47:10 Don't let anybody try and tell you anything happened before that. People have been saying, oh, Putin has, like, cerebral palsy. I mean, like, all this. I don't know. He seems to be doing pretty good. Sure. Yeah, he's an old guy. But, I mean, I wouldn't want to mess with him.
Starting point is 00:47:31 I think they just maybe they look at him as somebody who they're like jealous of kind of deep in their subconscious because he's actually like working for his own country. Are there going to be interested he has? Sure. Yeah. Any politician is going to have that. There'll be outside interest that, you know. But I mean, we know that everything is bought and paid for. we can look and see that, you know, APEC owns Don Bacon out of Nebraska.
Starting point is 00:48:05 One point, I mean, a guy you've never heard of, a congressman you've never heard of is taking $1.3 million from APEC. We know that from Thomas Massey that everybody in Congress is an APEC babysitter. We know that even people who don't, who haven't taken, they're taking money from, you know, from some kind of special interests that they're going to work for. Terry McCullough was the head of the DNC. I think he stepped down in like 2004. He was big into E85 fuel, corn. And it's crazy. When he stepped down and like was no longer in office,
Starting point is 00:48:48 he was like appointed to the board of like all these agricultural companies. It's just, I mean, how does that happen? I don't know. I just think that we're just not a serious country. And we're just an open-air strip mall. And basically an auction, an open-air auction house where everything gets auctioned off to the highest bidder. And then people look at something like Russia,
Starting point is 00:49:19 and they're like, well, yeah, that happens, but not on the scale of here. And I just think they're jealous. And they're like, you know, and they're all, I mean, think about it. I mean, Putin has way more self-control than I would. If I was president of Russia, I would have invaded Ukraine in 2014. I wouldn't.
Starting point is 00:49:40 He allowed anywhere from 12,000 to 30,000 of his own, of ethnic Russians to be killed in Ukraine. By that, the same, if you really know your Ukraine politics, it's the same people who, control this government. I mean, who pushed a war? Victoria Newland, Robert Kagan, Alexander Vindman. Where are they all from? Oh, Ukraine. All their families come from Ukraine historically.
Starting point is 00:50:11 Crazy. Oh, that's wild. You think that maybe this is ethnic animosity for a pogrom that happened in 1648, which really wasn't a pogrom? It was a bunch of Jews who rose up and started killing people because they thought their Messiah was coming. and the Cossack Kemmetsky had to put together a group to stop these people. But, oh, we got pogromed.
Starting point is 00:50:39 You're murdering people. Okay. That's, that's, you want to know the Ukraine War? You want to know why Victorian Newland and Vindman and all these people or, you know, like, hate Russia. And don't mind seeing a million Ukrainians die and two and two and. thousand or how many ever Russians die and they don't mind seeing Christians kill each other? I think that last... Maybe they wanted it that way.
Starting point is 00:51:08 I think that last point right there is the one that really gets me. You know, I've never claimed to be a deeply religious person, but I continue to be blown away at all over the world, whether it's Eastern Europe, where the Middle East, obviously. It's also happened in South America. It's happened in Europe where lots of places where interests within the U.S. direct foreign policy to affect or destabilize regions and the effect always just so happens to be a bunch of dead Christians and it's hanged the banners mission accomplished. How can a Christian population in the United States stomach that time and time and time again?
Starting point is 00:51:54 They're ignorant. Do you know, you're familiar with the term of schatology? Yes. Obviously. and study the end times. Yeah, they've been convinced that this group that has taken over and basically taken this piece of land hostage in the Middle East has something to do with Jesus coming back. That's as simple as I can put it. And that's it. That representative, Don Bacon,
Starting point is 00:52:25 on Twitter, he was going off about how we need to do anything we can to support Israel. And I said, Don, and I tweeted this Adam, and I can't believe he responds to me. I said, Don, one of these countries has to disappear, choose, A, the United States, B, Israel, pick one. And his answer to me was, read the book of Revelations. I saw that, yeah. Well, first of all, it's the book of Revelation.
Starting point is 00:52:55 So I don't even believe this guy believes. I think it's all money to him. like I said, 1.3 million from APEC. I don't even know that he's a Christian or believes anything. But yeah, he basically said he admitted to me and to the world on Twitter that he would rather see the United States destroyed than Israel. And he is an elected official here. Yeah, he's not just some random crank.
Starting point is 00:53:22 He's a U.S. representative. Yeah. Yeah. He's an elect. He is a U.S. representative to Nebraska. who sits in Congress in in Washington D.C. Not a state representative, national representative. There is your, I mean, how are you supposed to take these people seriously?
Starting point is 00:53:41 How do you take, is that America first? Is, I mean, is America first bombing Yemen when we can, and, you know, and supporting Israel when they're just basically dropping bombs on neighborhoods, and then they say, oh, well, you know, we may have killed 800 babies today, but every one of those babies had a terrorist hiding behind it. Okay, I don't believe you. Okay, I don't believe you. Oh, well, you're un-American.
Starting point is 00:54:17 I'm un-American because I don't believe people from another country because I don't support another country outside of America. I only support America. That's it. I don't care about Israel. I want Israel to exist because I want these people to have some place to go. If they love Israel so much, go there. Go live there.
Starting point is 00:54:43 I'm willing to kill everyone around you as long as you all leave. Just go back. If you are somebody who supports Israel, Jewish or not, go there. Go there. If you're willing to make excuses for, I mean, just dropping bombs on residential buildings, you know, like they were doing in, like they were doing in Beirut. I mean, in Lebanon. I think it was Beirut. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:13 Yeah. Oh, okay. Then, I mean, go there. Go there. You're not an American. I'm sorry. You're just not. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:23 And if that means the president is an American. be it i don't i don't consider anybody who has loyalty to another country to the point where they're going to excuse what they're doing there and they're going to make it so that if you speak out against it you have the possibility of getting arrested and thrown in jail yeah fuck that really fuck that and fuck you if that if that's your attitude really come to i mean say that shit to my face. I'd say, really,
Starting point is 00:55:59 I would love, I would love for you to do that. Come say that shit to my face. I appear in public enough. You people, you fucking disgust me. Beyond, I mean,
Starting point is 00:56:10 beyond disgust. I mean, how do the fuck do you call yourself an American? You're not an American. Fucking Thomas Jefferson would have freaking executed you on the White House lawn. Of course, you know,
Starting point is 00:56:26 without a doubt, obviously I agree because I'm I'm I'm to the level of when when people ask me these questions I tell them that well you have to understand I'm coming from the viewpoint of I still live in my country that's under occupation by a foreign government I'm not talking about Israel I'm talking about the US federal government because my nation broke away from them and and now we're under foreign occupation so we've been under foreign occupation for going on a couple hundred years so Pete you you've done it again I feel like I could talk to you for hours more about a lot of other topics,
Starting point is 00:56:59 but we're already 24 minutes over time. It happens. Ah, well, you know, we'll do it again. Pete, where... I get going. I get going. You're not going to stop me. Where can people go to check out more of your content and support you?
Starting point is 00:57:14 The Piquanos show, all podcatchers. Still on YouTube, not, not monetized, of course. I think they keep me on YouTube just so that it sort of discredits me. because so many people have been kicked off of YouTube. It's like, let's keep him on there because it discredits them. But I'm also on Rumble and Odyssey. And I have a substack, petesubstack.com, and the old glory club, that's a bunch of us who care about the founding of America and what it was founded for.
Starting point is 00:57:46 And we came together to promote that and to help other people, educate other people on just exactly what that means. and for the future of organizing, especially on the local level, because I think that's what the future of this country is. If you want liberty and you want freedom, you're going to have to do it in a locale, and you're going to have to make your stand from there. Think local, like local.
Starting point is 00:58:13 I've heard that somewhere. Well, on that note, Pete, I appreciate it, buddy. It's always a great time. Thank you, Alan. Guys, we're going to be back to wrap up the show. right after this commercial break.

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